- Scotland) and
earlier coifs are
usually made of
unadorned white linen and tied
under the chin. In the
Elizabethan and
early Jacobean eras,
coifs were frequently...
- The
Order of the
Coif (/ˈkɔɪf/) is an
American honor society for law
school graduates. The
Order was
founded in 1902 at the
University of
Illinois College...
- A mail
coif is a type of
armour which covered the head. A mail
coif is a
flexible hood of
chain mail that
extended to
cover the throat, neck, and the top...
-
representing the
skullcap that the
serjeants had
begun wearing over
their coifs in the 14th century. A King's or Queen's
Serjeant was a Serjeant-at-Law...
- The
keffiyeh or
kufiyyeh (Arabic: كُوفِيَّة, romanized: kūfiyya, lit. '
coif'), also
known in
Arabic as a
hattah (حَطَّة, ḥaṭṭa), is a
traditional headdress...
- Mail-clad
warriors typically wore
separate rigid helms over
their mail
coifs for head protection. Likewise,
blunt weapons such as
maces and warhammers...
- braies, tunics, and
coifs, from the
Maciejowski Bible, c. 1250. The man on the left
wears green hose over his braies. Man in a
coif and
shirt (camisa)...
- the 16th
century onward, with a
fashion for
early French hoods having red
coifs existing prior to 1520.
Crepine – A
pleated or
gathered head
covering made...
- The
Order of the
Coif is an
honor society for law
school graduates. It was
founded at the
University of
Illinois College of Law in 1902.
Following are...
- 1983. ISBN 0-89676-076-6
Wikimedia Commons has
media related to
Gable hood.
Tudor Gable Headdress:
portfolio of
images Tudor and
Elizabethan coifs v t e...